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New Detroit City Council President Saunteel Jenkins on Tuesday ordered an audit of all accounts former council President Charles Pugh oversaw.

Pugh, who was stripped of his presidency June 27 after disappearing about the time allegations arose of an inappropriate relationship with a recent Detroit high school graduate, was responsible for his office’s budget, along with the council’s administrative and media services divisions.

In all, the three entities had a combined $2.26-million budget in the fiscal year that ended June 30.

Jenkins, who became president last week, said the auditor general generally does not look for criminal activity. She said she is not accusing Pugh of any wrongdoing.

“It’s making sure the accounts have been expended correctly and that we are documenting as we go along appropriately,” she said in an interview after Tuesday’s council meeting. “I have not been in the president’s office, so I can’t speak to what has happened prior to last Tuesday, so I want someone to come in and document what’s been happening and whether or not there are the proper controls in place so that we have a clean start.”

Pugh is still a member of the council. He was not at Tuesday’s meeting and Jenkins said she still has not heard from him.

Pugh has been in seclusion for about a month after mysteriously disappearing about the time allegations stemming from his relationship with the teen surfaced. The teen’s family has asked Madison Heights police to suspend its investigation into a complaint the family filed June 29 relating to Pugh’s relationship with the teen. Pugh has not been charged criminally with any wrongdoing, and a lawsuit that lawyers for the mother of the teen said was being planned has yet to be filed.

In addition to requesting the audit of Pugh’s office, Jenkins also asked the city’s inspector general to investigate claims of missing equipment from the council’s media services division. Jenkins did not provide details of the missing equipment or its value.

Jenkins said emergency manager Kevyn Orr does not have to approve her inquiries because they were issued in the form of memorandums rather than contracts or resolutions on which the council must vote.

“Usually there’s a clean break. You have four years — there’s a president for four years and then you come in,” Jenkins said. “But there was no clean break, and there was a period of time where the president was still the president but wasn’t really here. I just want to make sure everything is properly documented.”